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Acknowledgments. Susan Orsillo, PhDSuffolk UniversityLizabeth Roemer, PhDUniversity of Massachusetts, Boston. The third wave . Behavior TherapyCognitive TherapyAcceptance-based modelsAcceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT)Acceptance-based Behavior Therapy for GAD Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)Integrative Behavioral Couple Therapy (IBCT)Behavioral Activation (BA)Functional Analytic Psychotherapy (FAP)Mindfulness-based Relapse Preven9444
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3. The third wave Behavior Therapy
Cognitive Therapy
Acceptance-based models
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT)
Acceptance-based Behavior Therapy for GAD
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)
Integrative Behavioral Couple Therapy (IBCT)
Behavioral Activation (BA)
Functional Analytic Psychotherapy (FAP)
Mindfulness-based Relapse Prevention (MBRP)
4. An etiological model of PTSD
Generalized psychological vulnerability
Generalized biological vulnerability
Experience of trauma
Developed by classical conditioning
Maintained by operant conditioning
Anxious apprehension
Avoidance or numbing of emotional response
Moderated by social support and ability to cope
(Keane & Barlow, 2002; Keane, Marshall & Taft, 2006)
5. Evidence-based psychological treatments for PTSD General aims
Extinction of conditioned fear and anxiety responses through repeated, non-reinforced exposure to CS
Development of alternative, competing responses to anxiety and fear
Emphasis on symptom reduction through mastery experiences and internal control strategies
6. Evidence-based treatments Exposure Therapy
Anxiety Management Training (AMT)
Combination treatments
(Foa, Keane & Friedman, 2000; Keane et al, 2006; Roth & Fonagy, 2005)
7. Exposure Therapy
Patient is guided through a vivid remembering of the trauma until extinction occurs
Goal is to reduce avoidance of anxiety and promote control/mastery over trauma-related cues
(Foa and Rothbaum, 1998)
8. Anxiety Management Training Package of behavioral and cognitive strategies to reduce and control anxiety
Progressive muscle relaxation
Diaphragmatic breathing
Cognitive restructuring
Communication skills training
Time management
Anger management/assertion training
(Meichenbaum, 1994)
9. Combination treatments Package of CT, exposure and emotion regulation skills
Essential components of CT
Self-monitoring
Identification and labeling of thoughts and associated emotions
Cognitive restructuring
Changing the content of a ‘dysfunctional’ cognition through logical analysis
Hypothesis testing
Conducting behavioral experiments to evaluate the validity of dysfunctional thoughts
10. Combination treatments
Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT)
Written exposure trials
cognitive restructuring of trauma related erroneous cognitions and schemas, particularly regarding safety, trust, power, control, self-esteem and intimacy
STAIRS
Emotion regulation and distress tolerance skills
Prolonged exposure
CSA related PTSD
(Resick et al. 2002; Cloitre et al., 2002)
11. The good news about EBTs for PTSD Treatments are efficacious when compared to TAU, wait list control and active placebo treatments
67% of completers no longer meet criteria for PTSD
56% of intent-to-treat patients no longer meet criteria for PTSD
Exposure and CBT are generally equally efficacious
(Bradley, 2005)
12. Limitations of current treatments 44% of intent-to-treat patients continue to meet criteria for PTSD (Bradley, 2005)
Using DSM criteria as treatment outcome may not be relevant to clinically significant change
Generalization of findings limited by study exclusion rates averaging 30%
Co-morbid Axis I disorder
Current substance abuse
Suicidal ideation or behavior
13. More limitations Relative lack of effectiveness research
RCTs generally compare monotherapies and not multimodal therapies
lack of evidence regarding long-term maintenance of gains
Vast majority of community sample patients do not receive EBTs
Due to lack of dissemination
Due to lack of treatment acceptance by patients
14. And still more Lowest effect sizes for patients with combat-related PTSD compared to other traumas
Focus on symptom reduction and not functional improvement
Interpersonal relationships
Vocational functioning
General quality of life
15. Limitations specific to CBT
Relatively difficult to train therapists to adherence (Kohlenberg, 2004; Dimidjian et al, 2006)
Emphasis on control and mastery strategies can have paradoxical effect in anxiety disorders (Roemer & Borkovec, 1994)
16. Limitations specific to exposure Requires memory of a specific trauma event
May have low acceptability to patients and providers
PTSD patients have more negative attitudes toward emotional expression
Exposure less effective for patients:
High levels of anger at pre-treatment
High levels of avoidance at pre-treatment
Perpetrators of harm who experience guilt/shame as primary symptoms
17. Potential limitations of standard therapies for OIF/OEF veterans
Stigma associated with mental health care
Reluctance to participate in exposure
Presence of co-morbid conditions
Lack of a single traumatic event
Associated feelings of guilt, loss, anger, sadness, grief
Potential for iatrogenic effects of exposure
18. The challenge in treating OIF/OEF veterans How do we provide secondary prevention?
Proper treatment may help prevent the development or progression of symptoms, or the underlying mechanisms leading to pathology (Zatzick et al. 2004)
what are these mechanisms?
What is the natural course of resilience, remission and recovery? (Bonanno 2004)
How can we use current treatments in secondary prevention?
How can we adapt or elaborate on these treatments for use with recently returned veterans?
19. Spectrum of Post-Deployment Mental Disorders (N = 46,571) Disorder N %
PTSD 20,638 44%
Drug Abuse 17,768 38%
Depression 14,317 31%
Neurotic Disorders 11,481 25%
Affective Psychosis 7,460 16%
Alcohol Dependence 3,116 7%
Acute Stress Reaction 1,327 3%
VHA Office of Public Health and Environmental Hazards, February 14, 2006 Rates of VHA enrolled veterans who have PTSD have been consistently rising since 2003.
The overall percentage of patients with PTSD seeking VA care more than doubled between February 13 and December 9, 2004 (Kang & Hyams, 2005).
Reserve component troops were as likely to develop PTSD as were Active Duty personnel (in VA utilization data).
Total number of OIF/OEF vets Dx with PTSD represents about 5% of VA’s total PTSD workload (as of 2005 NEPEC report for FY04)
Rates of VHA enrolled veterans who have PTSD have been consistently rising since 2003.
The overall percentage of patients with PTSD seeking VA care more than doubled between February 13 and December 9, 2004 (Kang & Hyams, 2005).
Reserve component troops were as likely to develop PTSD as were Active Duty personnel (in VA utilization data).
Total number of OIF/OEF vets Dx with PTSD represents about 5% of VA’s total PTSD workload (as of 2005 NEPEC report for FY04)
20. The cautionary tale of Critical Incident Stress Debriefing (CISD)
Intervention intended as secondary prevention for occupational trauma exposure (Mitchell 1983;1993)
Proprietary; dramatic claims of effectiveness
Basic assumptions
Exposure to traumatic stressor is sufficient to cause symptoms that can escalate to a pathological condition
Early and proximal intervention involving emotional catharsis (exposure) is prophylactic
21. CISD procedures Format
Group administration
Delivered by a mental health provider assisted by non-professional peers
Conducted in one 2-3 hour session within 24-72 hours of traumatic event
Mandatory attendance customary
Non-attendees or drop-outs typically retrieved by peer facilitator
22. CISD treatment protocol Introduction of the debriefing
Statement of facts regarding the traumatic event
Disclosure of thoughts regarding the event
Disclosure of emotional reactions, with focus on strong negative affects
Specification of possible symptoms
Education regarding consequences of trauma exposure
Planned re-entry to social environment
(Mitchell & Everly, 1993)
23. CISD outcome research No clinically significant improvement for participants at long-term follow-up
Slight but statistically significant worsening on outcome measures for those accepting debriefing
Preference for informal sources of support and assistance correlated strongly with improved outcome
Those with highest levels of both avoidance and intrusive recollection deteriorated most after debriefing; recovery better among those not receiving treatment (Mayou et al. 2000)
“CISD is inert at best and iatrogenic at worst” (Lohr et al. 2003)
24. An etiological model of PTSD
Generalized psychological vulnerability
Generalized biological vulnerability
Experience of trauma
Developed by classical conditioning
Maintained by operant conditioning
Anxious apprehension
Avoidance or numbing of emotional response
Moderated by social support and ability to cope
(Keane & Barlow, 2002; Keane, Marshall & Taft, 2006)
25. Approaches to providing secondary prevention Watch and wait
Respect the natural course of recovery among the resilient
Support naturally occurring restorative factors in patient’s life
Provide supportive treatments that do not interfere with natural resilience and are not iatrogenic
Wellness
Provide treatments that enhance naturally occurring restorative factors
Example: Behavioral Activation (BA)
26. Secondary prevention approaches
Rehabilitation
Support naturally occurring curative factors in patient’s life +
Provide treatments that prevent or inhibit pathological mechanisms implicated in the development and maintenance of psychological distress
Experiential avoidance
Co-morbid conditions that serve the function of experiential avoidance, especially SUDs and rumination
27. Acceptance-based Behavior Therapy (ABT) Standard therapies
Based on a conditioning model of PTSD
Aim is to reduce fear and anxiety through extinction
Coupled with strategies to change trauma-related thought content
An alternative model
PTSD can be understood as a disorder of experiential avoidance (Hayes et al. 1999)
Aim is to improve quality of life
Coupled with strategies to change the process of cognition rather than the content
(Orsillo & Batten 2005; Batten et al. 2005; Follette et al. 2004)
28. Experiential avoidance Attempts to change the form or frequency of internal events (thoughts, feelings, memories, sensations) (Hayes et al. 1996)
EA contributes to the development and maintenance of various forms of psychopathology, particularly anxiety disorders
Anxiety disorders develop when individuals are unwilling to experience anxiety (and associated thoughts, images, distressing emotions)
29. A variety of external and internal control strategies are utilized to alleviate distress via escape and avoidance
Behavioral avoidance of situations and cues (CS) that elicit unwanted internal states (CR)
Cognitive control strategies to avoid unwanted states
Thought suppression
Worried rumination
Distraction
Internal and external control strategies are negatively reinforced
External control strategies generalize
lead to disengagement with the naturally rewarding contingencies in the environment
Internal control strategies generalize
Become rigid and inflexible
Lead to narrowing of attention
Control strategies maintain distress / cause rebound
30. Thought suppression Effortful suppression of thoughts
Initially relieves distress
Has paradoxical long-term effect with rebound of avoided imagery
Leads to escalating efforts to control and master thoughts and imagery
Thought suppression associated with negative tx outcome (CSA, rape, MVA, Gulf War, urban violence)
Behavioral therapies have been adapted to specifically target experiential avoidance as a core feature of pathology
(Borkovec et al. 2004)
31. Acceptance-based Behavior Therapies (ABT) Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) (Hayes et al. 1999, 2004; Eifert & Forsyth, 2005)
Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) (Segal et al. 2002)
Acceptance-based Behavior Therapy for GAD (Roemer& Orsillo, 2004, 2005)
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) (Linehan, 1993)
Integrative Behavioral Couple Therapy (IBCT) (Jacobson & Christensen, 1996)
Behavioral Activation (BA) (Jacobson et al. 1996; Dimidjian et al. 2006)
Functional Analytic Psychotherapy (FAP) (Kohlenberg & Tsai, 1991; Kohlenberg et al. 2004)
Mindfulness-based Relapse Prevention (MBRP) (Marlatt et al. 2005)
32. Acceptance-based Behavior Therapy (ABT) Basic assumptions
Treatment components
Treatment strategies and techniques
33. ABT assumptions Emotions are just emotions; thoughts are just thoughts; memories are just memories
Emotions are information; not good or bad
Control of internal events is not an option
Control is the problem, not the solution
34. Similarities to Exposure/CBT Both consider avoidance to be a core feature of pathology
Both advocate approach as an integral treatment strategy
35. Differences from Exposure/CBT Approach and avoidance
Approach behaviors are inherently valuable
Approach behaviors are pragmatically valuable in order to reengage with natural reinforcers and expand domains of functioning
Emphasis on clinically valued change rather than symptom reduction
36. Differences Attention
CBT emphasizes directing attention toward stimuli associated with disorder (or distract from)
ABT emphasizes directing attention broadly toward flow of experience
37. Differences Cognition – radically different understanding of the role of cognition in development and treatment of disorders
Cognitions are causal vs. cognitions are responses
Importance of content vs. importance of function
Goal to change content vs. goal to change relationship to one’s own thoughts and feelings
38. Differences Control within the CBT framework
Lack of perceived control and unpredictability strongly associated with distress (Mineka et al. 2006)
Control/predictability can be increased by
Attending to thoughts and associated emotions
Changing thoughts from irrational to rational
Through process of logical analysis and behavioral experimentation
39. Differences Control within the ABT framework
Efforts to exert internal control maintain distress
Thoughts and emotions are transitory experiences of the mind and body
Treatment provides experiential learning of acceptance rather than control
Distress naturally wanes as a consequence of not being escalated by control strategies (e.g., MBCT)
40. ABT treatment components Overarching goals
Target experiential avoidance and expand experiential acceptance
Target associated behavioral restrictions and expand engagement with valued life goals and activities
1. Psychoeducation
2. Assessment
3. Experiential acceptance
4. Valued action
41. 1. Psychoeducation Role of emotions as information (Linehan 1993)
Limits and costs of control strategies (Roemer & Orsilllo 2004)
Importance of approach and emotional engagement in therapy sessions (Jaycox et al. 1998)
42. 2. Assessment General assessment
Symptom review and diagnostic assessment
Self-report measures
PTSD
Anxiety
depression
Self-report functional measures
Life satisfaction
Valued life domains
(Roemer & Orsillo, 2004; Orsillo & Batten, 2005)
43. 2. Assessment Avoidance and suppression
Self-report measures of experiential avoidance and thought suppression (Hayes et al. 2006; Eifert & Forsyth, 2005)
Acceptance and Action Questionnaire (AAQ)
White Bear Suppression Inventory
Thought Control Questionnaire
Values assessment
Self-report measures to identify idiographic treatment outcomes (Hayes et al. 1999, Eifert & Forsyth, 2005)
Generate values
Rate values to establish priorities
Identify intermediate steps, actions and barriers
44. 3. Experiential acceptance Mindfulness
Targets identification of thoughts/feelings as ‘reality’
Willingness
Encourages approach behaviors
Distress tolerance skills
Targets avoidance due to inability to tolerate emotion
Emotion regulation skills
Targets avoidance due to inability to modulate emotion
45. Key concepts in Mindfulness Decentering
Experiencing thoughts and feelings as mental events and not reality
Early problem recognition
Intentional awareness allows “turning toward” difficulties
Anti-ruminative
Experience is of current awareness, not elaborate thinking about implications, meaning, etc.
Generic skill
Daily practice competes with development of avoidance, escape and control strategies
(Segal et al, 2002)
46. Steps in Mindfulness training Practice attention to a single sense
Practice attention to the flow of experience
Practice attention to thoughts, feelings, images as part of the flow of experience
Practice attention to the flow of experience during activities
47. Mechanisms of Mindfulness Exposure to previously avoided classes or categories of emotional experience, leading to decreased distress via extinction
Self-monitoring associated with improved appraisal of actual contingencies, leading to increased flexibility in responding
State of relaxation (response prevention)
Change in attitude toward internal experiences leads to decreased volatility
(Baer, 2003; Teasdale et al. 2002; Segal et al. 2002)
48. 4. Valued action Assessment questions
What is important to the patient?
To what extent are they living life in accordance with their values?
How do their symptoms interfere with the pursuit of their values?
49. 4. Valued action Intervention techniques
Writing exercises to clarify values
Self-monitoring to assess degree to which life is spent in valued activities (and/or degree to which patient is emotionally engaged in valued activities)
Goal setting
Identify concrete steps intermediate to valued activities
Commit to plan
Identify potential barriers
Review previous goals
(Roemer & Orsillo, 2004; Eifert & Forsyth, 2005; Orsillo & Batten, 2005)
50. Integrating Exposure Therapy Exposure sessions for specific events as well as classes of emotion
Goal is acceptance rather than extinction
Therapist must be practiced in approaching emotional experience, and mindful of not colluding with patient in experiential avoidance
Therapist must be capable of achieving the metacognitive state of ‘engaged observation’
51. Summary Acceptance-based therapies are useful extensions of exposure-based in secondary prevention of PTSD and co-morbid disorders
Empirical support in treatment of anxiety, depression, SUDs, couples, BPD
Acceptable to patients
Accommodates exposure for emotions other than fear & anxiety, or in absence of Criterion A
Teaches cognitive and behavioral skills that may prevent development of avoidant and controlling strategies associated with the exacerbation of anxiety, depressive relapse, substance use, conflict, and intimacy problems
Goal is broad functional improvement